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Articles Lesson

The document outlines the different kinds of nouns in English, including common, proper, abstract, and collective nouns, along with their functions and gender classifications. It also explains the rules for forming plurals, the use of articles ('a', 'an', 'the'), and the concept of zero article in various contexts. Additionally, it provides examples and exceptions for each rule to aid understanding.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views5 pages

Articles Lesson

The document outlines the different kinds of nouns in English, including common, proper, abstract, and collective nouns, along with their functions and gender classifications. It also explains the rules for forming plurals, the use of articles ('a', 'an', 'the'), and the concept of zero article in various contexts. Additionally, it provides examples and exceptions for each rule to aid understanding.
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ARTICLES

Notes about nouns


A.4 KINDS ​OF​ ​NOUNS​ ​IN​ E​NGLISH​ :

Common nouns : ​dog, table, man

Proper nouns : ​Tom, France, Madrid, Mrs Kadiri

Abstract nouns : ​charity, beauty, fear, courage, joy

Collective nouns : ​team, crowd, flock, group

B.FUNCTION.​ A noun can function as :

The complement of the verb ​be, become, seem : ​Tom is an actor

The object of a verb : ​I saw Tom .

The object of a preposition : ​I spoke to Tom.

Nb : after be, become, seem,- if the noun is singular, we use the indefinite article « a » or « an »

Mary is an actress. - if the noun is plural, no article :

Both Tom and Mary are actors.

C.GENDER

Masculine : men, boys and male animals (pronoun « he » or « they »)

Feminine : women, girls and female animals (pronoun « she » or « they »)

Neuter : inanimate things, animals whose sex we don’t know and sometimes babies whose sex we
don’t know (pronoun « it » or « they »)

Most nouns have the same form for masculine and feminine :

Parent, teacher, child, painter, singer, cousin.

Some have different forms :

Brother, sister uncle, aunt nephew, niece cock, hen horse, mare lord, lady

Some form the feminine from the masculine by adding « ess » :

Actor, actress conductor, conductress

D.P​LURALS

● The plural of a noun is made by adding “s” to thesingular, i.e, we add “s” in most cases
(books, boys, days). ​BUT

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ARTICLES

1. If the noun ends in the letter “S”, “SH” or “CH”, we add “ES​”: bus, buses; church,
churches; watch, watches; kiss, kisses.
2. If the noun ends in a consonant + Y, the “Y” changes to “IES”:
Country, countries; fly, flies; party, parties​. (If the noun ends in a vowel+
Y, we just add “S”: boys)
3. If the noun ends in “O”, the plural is “OES”, as in “​tomatoes​”.
4. Irregular plurals: ​child, children; woman, women; person, people (persons is
possible but not common), sheep, sheep; fish, fish; shelf, shelves; knife,
knives; wife, wives; half, halves; leaf, leaves; thief, thieves.

N​ON​-​COUNT​ ​NOUNS

If it is a non-count noun, no article is used. It has no plural form and has a singular construction
(meaning it is used with a singular verb.):

Information, time, money, news (Bad news ​travels fast), insurance, software,
inflation, butter, cheese, advice, chocolate, bread, luck, justice, freedom,
politics, painting, music, physics (Physics ​is a science subject), mathematics,
economics, gymnastics, furniture, luggage….

Notes about articles


Articles are words which may or may not be used before a noun to show if the noun is new to the
listener or reader (the indefinite article “a”/ “an”). If the listener or reader definitely knows what
we’re talking about, we use the definite article “the”.

Article « a » or « an »
« a » if the first letter of the following word is pronounced like a consonant:

A hospital, a university, a one-hour walk, a guitar, a U-turn.

« an » if the first letter of the following noun is pronounced like a vowel:

An apple, an hour, an MBA, a European car, an orange juice, an honour, an honest person,

USES OF « a » or « an »

1. With singular, unspecified count nouns when we mention them for the first time.
They are building ​a​ new hospital in Hay El Hassani.
2. In definitions, to talk about an element representing a category
A hit is ​a​ successful song.
3. With the names of jobs:

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ARTICLES

Ali is ​a​ lawyer.


Afaf became ​an​ architect last June.
4. Before a noun put in apposition (a noun put in apposition gives additional
information):
Al-Farabi, ​a​ renowned philosopher and ​philosopher​ of the ​Islamic
Golden Age​, was an​ I
​ ranian.
5. Between a preposition and a noun:

He went out without an umbrella.

He went to Italy as ​a​ tourist.

6. In exclamations:
​What a​ good idea!
He is ​such a​ helpful, generous person!
7. In expressions about frequency, measurements, prices, quantity or number.
Mokhtar practices the piano once ​a​ day.
The speed limit is 60 kilometers ​an​ hour in urban areas.
Gasoline​ c
​ osts 8.56 MAD ​a​ liter.
He has done ​a​ lot of work.
I have ​a​ little money. We can get ourselves some hot coffee.
We can talk. I have ​a​ few minutes before going to work.

REMEMBER: DO NOT USE « a » or « an » WITH:


Plural nouns ​(​Children​ belong in school, not at the factory​); non-count nouns
(He never asks for ​advice​)​; meals ​(See you at ​dinner​ tonight).

Article « the »
​ ouns, count nouns or non-count nouns, singular or
The definite article “the” can be used with ​all​ n
plural.

Note about pronunciation: /ðə/ or "the" /ði:/

“the” is pronounced ​ /​ ð​ə/​


​ before a consonant (​the sun, the one and only​), a consonant

sound (​the European Union, the universe​) and ​ /​ ði:​/​


​ before a vowel ​(the

environment, the outsider) and a vowel sound (the FBI, the MP3 player​).

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ARTICLES

USES OF “the”
1. To talk about a specific noun, known to both the speaker and the listener.
They have two children, a boy and a girl. ​The​ boy is six and ​the
girl is four.​ (the children have been mentioned for the second time in
the second sentence, so the speaker and listener both know which boy
and girl they are talking about).
2. The noun is known from the context.
I’m going to ​the​ supermarket. Do you need anything?
Where is ​the​ umbrella?
Here’s ​the​ hotel.
3. To talk about something unique (there is only one)
The​ President; ​the​ Earth; ​the​ sun; ​the​ moon
4. With ordinal numbers.
The​ first. ​The​ fifth time
5. With superlatives.
The​ most interesting place.
The​ largest
6. With an adjective to refer to a group of people (with a plural construction)
The ​poor are asking for help.
The ​old deserve our respect.
The​ rich are sometimes selfish.
7. To talk about a specific category, such as an animal species.
The​ lynx is an endangered species.
8. With musical instruments.
He is learning to play ​the​ lute/piano/guitar/violin/drums
9. With seas and oceans. ​The Atlantic. The Mediterranean​.
10. With rivers and deserts. ​The Nile. The Sahara.
11. With mountain ranges. ​The High Atlas Mountains​.
12. With geographical areas​. The Middle East. The Midwest.
13. With groups of countries, islands or states​. The Bahamas. The Gulf
States. The Canary Islands.
14. With public buildings. ​The Parliament.
15. With theaters and cinemas​. The Megarama. The Rialto. The Kawakib.
The Municipal Theatre.
16. With newspapers. ​The Washington Post.
17. With hotels. ​The Hyatt Regency. The Sheraton.
18. With radio and computer
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ARTICLES

I’m working on the computer at the moment.

Zero article Ø with:


Example: ​I like ​Ø ​music​, Ø ​ ​cycling​, and ​Ø ​cars​.
1. We use zero article with plural count nouns when talking about people or things ​in general​.
Ø Cats like Ø milk.
2. With non-count nouns and abstract nouns when talking in general.
Ø Heavy industry causes Ø ​pollution​.
Note: If the non-count noun is specified (we know which pollution exactly), we use the
definite article “the”: ​The​ ​pollution​ in the city center is worse today than ten years ago.
3. Public buildings where the focus is on the activity taking place there.
My older sister goes to Ø ​university​ every weekday (as a student; the speaker is thinking
about higher education)
She spent three months in Ø ​prison​ (as a punishment for committing a crime)
They took him to Ø ​hospital​ after the accident.(as a patient)
It’s June 30​th​. Ø ​School​ is out.(No more studying and exam taking)
4. Countries
Morocco is the largest canned sardine exporter in the world.
5. Streets.
I live on ​Ø ​Fifth avenue/​ Ø ​Oxford Street
6. Lakes. Ø ​Lake Agualmane Oumlil.
7. Mountains​. I wanted to climb ​Ø ​Mount Toubkal.
8. TV​. I saw it on ​Ø ​Television
9. Airports. ​We arrived at ​Ø ​Orly at 7PM
10. With “little”+ non count noun to mean “hardly any; almost no”.
We had ​Ø ​little snow last year.
11. With “few” + count noun to mean a very small number. Almost nobody.
Ø ​Few people were interested in the exhibition. (​The number of visitors was very
small. Almost no visitors came).

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